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As teachers, we know that kids need to move. But it can be hard to carve out the time during the middle of class, find the space or know exactly what to do. There’s also the issue of settling everyone back down after they’re all pumped up.

Research shows powerful links between physical activity and academic performance, including improved grades and standardized test scores. Not only does exercise make kids healthier, it can help them focus and behave better in class.

Just as adults don’t sit still at their desks all day, kids shouldn’t be expected to either, says Charles Hillman, a professor in kinesiology and community health who has studied the impact of exercise on learning at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

So what can schools do to make sure kids are getting the recommended 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity they need every day?

Don’t rely on recess and gym class.

“It’s a poor assumption to think that students get all their energy out in P.E. and recess,” says Hillman.

Often kids don’t engage in an adequate amount of physical activity at recess or in a typical gym class—and not all schools offer them regularly, especially as students progress through school. Here are some numbers to know:

Consider standing desks.

Add what you can to make your classroom environment welcoming to movement throughout the day. Standing desks that students can self-adjust throughout the class—to help them stay more focused and energized. One British study in which a class of 9- and 10-year-old students rotated from traditional to standing desks for part of every day had teachers reporting positive changes in class behavior.Source: Standing Desks Become Newest Change to Help Students’ Health

In other countries, such as Japan, teachers of primary-age children recognize this and give 10- to 15-minute breaks every hour. “Kids come back more refreshed,” Zavacky says. “They are able to be more attentive, sit still longer and can resume their concentration.”

Get creative with fun moves.

Don’t know how to get kids moving without bumping into one another in your tight classroom? It can be easy to do with some help from your physical education teacher or free online resources.

Avoid formal calisthenics, and be creative. Make “fit sticks” with various activities—doing the twist, serving tennis balls or paddling a kayak—written on craft sticks that the students choose and do together next to their desks, suggests Lisa Perry, national physical education and health education advisor for the nonprofit Alliance for a Healthier Generation.

“The teacher needs to participate as well and be enthusiastic,” adds Perry.

Breathe and slow down.

To refocus after a burst of exercise, Perry suggests having students do breathing exercises or poses. For instance, try a “standing pretzel” where you cross your legs, cross your arms and fold your hands up in front, and inhale. “It requires concentration. They settle down but don’t realize they are doing it,” says Perry.

Create lessons with action.

During instruction, be intentional about weaving in movement. For example, have students rotate throughout the room at stations or work in pairs and get up to switch partners. Post problems on the walls that students walk up to solve and then have to find another location with the right answer.

Walk around the building to take an inventory of other spaces where physical activity could occur, advises Zavacky. You might identify a place where students can recite math tables while jumping rope. Brain research shows that when students hear, move and experience information through physical activity, it can cement instruction. The right mobile adjustable standing desk can support all of this.

Support for physical activity in the school requires some flexibility and support from administration as well, notes Zavacky. It may take challenging established protocols to initiative programs, but she encourages teachers to be creative.

Physical activity as part of teaching, adds Zavacky, requires mindful planning: “But it’s not impossible—and it can be fun.”